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BWNS -- Hollywood role for veteran Baha'i actor


From Bahá'í World News Service <bwns@bwc.org>
Date Tue, 7 Jun 2005 17:34:04 +0300

Baha'i World News Service
See the story, and photographs on the BWNS site at http://news.bahai.org
For more information, contact editor@bahaiworldnews.org

Hollywood role for veteran Baha'i actor
LONDON, United Kingdom, 7 June 2005 (BWNS) -- Veteran actor Earl Cameron
was taking part in a Baha'i community activity in the United Kingdom
when he received a surprising phone call from his agent.

It was an offer to audition for a role in a major movie, something
unexpected for Mr. Cameron, now 87 and largely retired from the movie
business.

His agent told him that Sydney Pollack, director of "Tootsie" and the
Oscar-winning "Out of Africa," was considering him for a part in a new
political thriller.

"I had to rush to test for the role," Mr. Cameron said. "I turned up
late...but they liked what I did."

Mr. Cameron was cast as Edmund Zuwanie -- the unsavory president of a
fictional African country -- in "The Interpreter," starring Nicole
Kidman and Sean Penn. He had no hesitation accepting the role.

"I feel that an actor must portray life, and despotic characters need to
be portrayed and shown up," he said.

The film tells the story of a translator, played by Ms. Kidman, who
overhears a plot to assassinate Mr. Zuwanie as he addresses the UN
General Assembly.

"The Interpreter" is the first film ever to be shot inside the United
Nations building in New York.

When Alfred Hitchcock made "North by Northwest" in 1959, he built a
replica of the UN's interiors. With "The Interpreter," officials allowed
the movie to be filmed in the UN building after office hours.

At the film's climax, Mr. Zuwanie is portrayed addressing the General
Assembly, a scene that reminded the actor of the Baha'i belief in the
need for world unity.

"There I was," said Mr. Cameron, "standing at the lectern in front of
2,000 extras playing all the ambassadors."

"Seeing the names of all the countries on the desks in front of me, I
got a real sense of the importance of the UN."

"The world is desperate for peace and there's no other way it can go but
towards greater cooperation at a global level," he said.

"Solutions have to be found at a level above national interests -- and
so far there isn't any other organization which can establish these
first steps towards lasting peace."

The critics have unanimously praised his performance in "The
Interpreter." He has been described as the "one memorable performer in
the film...absolutely eerie as the dictator of Matobo." (heraldnet.com)

The "Baltimore Sun" wrote: "Earl Cameron is magnificent as the slimy old
fraud of a dictator..." "Rolling Stone" described Mr. Cameron's
appearance as "subtle and menacing." Philip French in "The Observer"
referred to "that fine Caribbean actor Earl Cameron."

The film's UK premiere at the Empire in London's Leicester Square was a
glamorous occasion. Mr. Cameron was called to the stage by Sydney
Pollack to be presented to the audience along with Nicole Kidman.

"It's the first time I had been to a premiere for many years," Mr.
Cameron said. "I've never experienced anything like that. There were
thousands of cameras."

Earl Cameron moved from Bermuda to England during World War II and there
became a pioneering black British actor. In London in 1963 he became a
Baha'i.

"I never felt there was any conflict between being a Baha'i and being an
actor," he said.

"From time to time I managed to get certain lines in the script changed
by the director if I felt uncomfortable saying them," he said.

"Very occasionally I turned a part down. There was a period when black
actors tended to get the villain parts. But I often got sympathetic
character roles. Perhaps I have a sympathetic look about me."

>From the 1950s to the 1970s, he appeared in many films including
"Sapphire," "The Message" -- the story of the Prophet Muhammad -- and
the James Bond movie, "Thunderball."

Mr. Cameron also became a familiar face on television in such popular
shows as "Danger Man," "Doctor Who," and "The Prisoner."

A twelve-year career break followed when Mr. Cameron went to the Solomon
Islands with his family to assist the Baha'i community there.


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